WHITTLESFORD
The village of Whittlesford stands by the river
Cam or Granta, 7 miles south of Cambridge. The
parish, roughly rectangular in shape and 1,976 a. in
extent, (fn. 1) is bounded on the south by the RoystonNewmarket road, formerly a branch of the Icknield
Way, and on part of the west by a brook rising at
a place called Nine Wells. The eastern boundary
follows various branches and former channels of the
river. The northern boundary with Little Shelford
was undefined until inclosure, the land being partly
intercommonable. (fn. 2) The parish lies mostly between
50 and 125 ft. above sea level, and has little sharp
relief. The subsoil is mostly chalk, with alluvium
along the river, but there is a gravel rise near Stanmoor Hall in the north-west quarter of the parish,
and south of the village, where gravel lies over the
chalk, the ground also swells gently to over 100 ft.
The level northern part of the parish is drained by
small streams and water-courses mostly leading
north-east into the river.
The parish was cultivated until its inclosure c.
1810 on a traditional three-field system, and was
thereafter mainly devoted to mixed arable farming.
Large areas of common pasture and meadow remained until inclosure along its northern and eastern
edges. There was also some woodland, mostly
between the Cambridge road and the river. (fn. 3) The
manor in, probably, the 17th century contained £400
worth of timber, (fn. 4) and in the 19th the Whittlesford
estate included from c. 65 a. to 100 a. of wood. (fn. 5) In
the late 19th century low-lying and boggy land west
of the village called Middlemoor, used as pasture
until inclosure, was left to be overgrown with trees,
and a belt of trees was established along the western
boundary with Thriplow. (fn. 6)
Whittlesford had 33 inhabitants recorded in
1086, (fn. 7) there were c. 105 tenants in 1279, (fn. 8) and 33 persons paid tax there in 1327. (fn. 9) In 1377 142 adults paid
the poll tax. (fn. 10) In 1477 there were c. 75 men over
12 in the village, sharing 43 surnames. (fn. 11) In 1525
49 persons paid the subsidy, (fn. 12) and there were 49
families in 1563. (fn. 13) There were 73 households taxed
in 1664 and 88 in 1674, (fn. 14) and in 1676 there were said
to be 200 conformists. (fn. 15) In 1728 58 families comprised 244 people, besides 5 dissenting families. (fn. 16)
In 1801 the population was 416, and it grew steadily
throughout the 19th century, reaching 579 in 1841
and 875 in 1891. The growth was sustained by the
establishment of small-scale industries in Whittlesford and Sawston. By 1901 numbers had begun to
fall, and c. 1920 the civilian population was only
c. 720. Between 1931 and 1951 there were c. 800
inhabitants in the village, but the population had
risen to 1,012 by 1961 (fn. 17) and 1,190 by 1971. (fn. 18)
The village stands almost in the centre of the
parish, along two sides of a triangle of roads. The
north-east side is formed by a road running from
Cambridge to Duxford and beyond, roughly parallel
with the river. To the north-east, amid rivermeadows and former manorial closes, the church
and the moated side of the former manor-house
stand slightly detached from the village. A lane west
from them crosses the Cambridge road to become
the main village street, the south-east side of the
triangle, which runs along the northern edge of the
gravel rise. It was formerly called South Street (fn. 19)
but in 1973 High Street, continuing after a bend to
West End. Half-way along West End, near the
former parsonage, it once widened into a small
green. (fn. 20) Before inclosure most of the dwellings in the
village lay along that street, where many timberframed and thatched cottages, not all in good repair,
survived in 1973. Among the larger old houses were
Markings Farm, an L-shaped 17th-century house,
and one red-brick Georgian house with segmentalheaded windows and a classical doorcase. Along the
Cambridge road north-west of the cross-roads, formerly called North Street, there were in 1810 a few
scattered cottages. Its south-western side, however,
was mainly occupied by large farmsteads, (fn. 21) as at
the Grove, formerly Grove House Farm, where
a Georgian front block has been added to a 16thcentury timber-framed house, and Rayners Farm
at the north end, an L-shaped house of c. 1500 with
prominent chimney-stacks, which retains two original timber-mullioned windows and fireplaces,
perhaps 17th-century, with shafts supporting rude
pediments. (fn. 22) By 1810 a few houses, including one
cottage with a bulky stepped chimney-breast, stood
at the junction with the Cambridge road of Whippletree Lane, later Middlemoor Road, which led to
West End, but along most of that road there were
no buildings then or later. (fn. 23) Under Charles II the
village contained c. 80 dwellings, (fn. 24) but in 1801 only
about 60 houses. By 1831 there were 113 dwellings
and in 1851 135, (fn. 25) of which c. 60 were in South
Street and c. 30 in North Street. (fn. 26) Building later
progressed more slowly, so that there were by 1900
only c. 180 houses compared with 160 in 1861.
Except for farmsteads built after inclosure at Wells,
Stanmoor Hall, and Hill farms, settlement was still
largely confined to the old village site. Later there
was ribbon development along the road south to
Whittlesford station and Duxford. Almost 40 houses
were built between 1921 and 1931 and over 80
between 1951 and 1961. (fn. 27) Council houses were built
at the north-western and south-western corners of
the village, and a larger council estate was laid out
between Church Lane and Mill Lane. In 1962 there
were c. 90 council houses. (fn. 28)

Whittlesford before inclosure, c.1810
The village formerly contained several public
houses, the oldest and most prominent being the
Waggon and Horses, recorded from 1810 to 1937.
In 1851 there were five other beer-retailers, in 1904
seven, and in 1937 six named public houses. (fn. 29) The
inns at Whittlesford Bridge are mentioned above
under Duxford.
Like most neighbouring villages, Whittlesford lay
off the main routes of the area, standing about a mile
from the Royston-Newmarket road, a turnpike from
1770 to 1874, (fn. 30) to which it was connected by the
road south from Cambridge. A minor road leading
west from the village towards Thriplow was stopped
at inclosure; another towards Newton was straightened. (fn. 31) The London-Cambridge railway, completed in 1845, crosses the south-east corner of the
parish. Whittlesford station, opened in 1845 and
rebuilt between 1877 and 1890, (fn. 32) was still in use for
passengers in 1973.
Robert Maynard, an agricultural tool-maker,
founded in 1866 a Working Man's Institute, furnished with a lecture hall and reading and bagatelle
rooms. (fn. 33) It closed between 1922 and 1925, to be
replaced by 1929 with a new village institute, to
which H. G. Spicer of Sawston added c. 1930 a reading room and library. (fn. 34) The Whittlesford Co-operative and Industrial Society, established c. 1891,
merged between 1922 and 1929 with the Sawston
Co-operative Society. (fn. 35) Its shop had closed by 1973.
During the First World War a hospital for the
wounded, taking up to 1,000 patients, was set up at
Whittlesford and remained in use until 1919. (fn. 36)
Barracks for Duxford airfield, under construction
in 1918, remained in use until 1961. (fn. 37)
The village feast was held in the 18th and 19th
centuries on St. Barnabas's day. (fn. 38) It was revived as
a neo-Victorian festivity in 1971. (fn. 39) Traditional ceremonies on Plough Monday, Shrove Tuesday, and
Mayday were still being celebrated by the youth
of the village in the mid 19th century. (fn. 40) Camping
close, opposite the Victorian vicarage, is said to have
been used for the game of camping, a rough kind of
football common in East Anglia. (fn. 41)
Manors and Other Estates.
Before the
Conquest Earl Gurth, King Harold's brother, owned
the manor comprising almost all the township. By
1086 it had been given to the Countess Judith, the
Conqueror's niece and Earl Waltheof's widow. (fn. 42) Part
of her Cambridgeshire lands, called the barony of
Kirtling, and including WHITTLESFORD manor,
passed to her younger daughter Alice (or Adelize)
who married Ralph de Tony (fn. 43) (d. 1126). Alice's heir
was their son Roger de Tony (d. by 1162). The overlordship of the manor, which by the late 12th century had been subinfeudated to a junior branch of
the Tony family, descended with that barony in its
main line to Robert de Tony (d.s.p. 1309). Robert's
sister and heir Alice (fn. 44) married Guy de Beauchamp,
earl of Warwick, (fn. 45) and Kirtling manor with its
dependencies descended with the earldom of Warwick until its forfeiture in 1499. (fn. 46) In 1500 Whittlesford was said to be held of the Crown as of the
barony of Kirtling, (fn. 47) and after 1534 (fn. 48) of the lords
North, owners of Kirtling manor. (fn. 49)
Like the barony of which it was held, (fn. 50) Whittlesford manor was not held by knight service, but
nominally in free socage, although its tenure approximated to a military serjeanty. Its tenants were
obliged to attend the lord of Kirtling when he went
to the wars in the king's company. (fn. 51) In 1279 that
service was due to Ralph de Tony (d. c. 1295) from
Hugh fitz Otes, who had been interpolated as mesne
lord between Ralph and Sir John de Akeny, tenant
in demesne, who was said to hold of Hugh for
1/20 knight's fee. (fn. 52) By 1400 the military duty had been
changed into the yearly render of a sparrow-hawk
or 2s. to the earls of Warwick, (fn. 53) which was still due
in the 16th century. (fn. 54) Occasionally in the 15th century, however, Whittlesford was said to be held as
¼ knight's fee. (fn. 55)
Whittlesford was probably among the lands given
by Roger de Tony (d. by 1162) to his younger son
Roger (d. by 1185) whose son Baldwin de Tony (fn. 56)
held it in 1206. (fn. 57) Baldwin died after 1215, (fn. 58) and by
1228, perhaps by 1217, all his lands had come to
Roger de Akeny, (fn. 59) who held Whittlesford c. 1235
and died c. 1240. (fn. 60) Although Roger left daughters
as his heirs, (fn. 61) all his East Anglian lands, including
Whittlesford, had passed by 1241 to Baldwin de
Akeny, (fn. 62) who in 1267 received a grant of free warren
in Whittlesford, and survived until 1272. (fn. 63) In 1279
Whittlesford was held by Baldwin's son Sir John de
Akeny, (fn. 64) who was dead by 1293 when his widow
Alice apparently held the manor. She died after
1300, (fn. 65) and was followed by their son Baldwin de
Akeny (fl. 1311). (fn. 66) He is said to have married Joan,
whose second husband William Howard (fn. 67) held
Whittlesford, presumably in right of her dower, in
1316 and 1327 (fn. 68) and died in 1328. (fn. 69) In 1331 Baldwin's son John de Akeny sold the manor to Roger
Wateville and his wife Margery. (fn. 70) Roger probably
died the next year, (fn. 71) and Margery was occupying
the manor-house in 1346. (fn. 72) A John Wateville was
living at Whittlesford c. 1340. (fn. 73)
By 1358 the manor probably belonged to William
Muschet of Fen Ditton, who died after 1362. (fn. 74) In
1365 and 1368 it was held by Sir Richard Muschet (fn. 75)
(d. after 1371), (fn. 76) and in 1374 by Sir John Muschet. (fn. 77)
In 1378 it was settled on Sir George Muschet. (fn. 78)
Probably c. 1394 Sir George sold it to Joan, widow
of Roger, Lord Scales (d. 1388), (fn. 79) and her second
husband, Sir Edmund Thorp, who held it in her
right in 1401. (fn. 80) Joan died in 1415, having devised it
for life to her husband, killed in France in 1418.
The manor had been entailed by Joan's will successively on her grandson, Robert, Lord Scales (d.s.p.
1419), and her two daughters by Thorp, Joan, wife
of Sir John Clifton (d. 1447), and Isabel (d. 1436),
who married Philip Tilney (d. 1453). (fn. 81) Joan Clifton
probably held Whittlesford until she died without
issue in 1450. (fn. 82) Philip Tilney, who had taken orders
by 1444, may have arranged that it should pass to his
younger son Robert, (fn. 83) whose title was apparently
disputed by Thomas, Lord Scales (d. 1460), Robert
Scales's brother. In 1451 Thomas entailed the manor
on Robert Tilney, (fn. 84) who held it until his death in
1500. His son and heir Robert, aged 9 at his father's
death, (fn. 85) died in 1542. After a dispute 120 a. of the
demesne was assigned as dower to his second wife
Audrey, (fn. 86) who held them with her second husband
William Johnson until c. 1590. (fn. 87) Robert Tilney's son
and heir John, being much indebted, (fn. 88) sold the
manor in 1552 to William Hawtrey. (fn. 89) Sir John
Huddleston of Sawston used his influence at court
to oblige Hawtrey to sell it to him in 1555. (fn. 90) Huddleston died holding the manor in 1557, (fn. 91) and it
descended with the Sawston estate in the Huddleston family (fn. 92) until the early 18th century. Its income
was sometimes assigned to junior members of the
family. (fn. 93) In 1735 the court of Whittlesford was held
in the name of Henry Howard, Lord Morpeth (later
earl of Carlisle), (fn. 94) probably as trustee for Richard
Huddleston (d. 1760), who is said to have sold the
manor (fn. 95) to John Stevenson of Newton, to whom the
earl conveyed it in 1745. (fn. 96) Stevenson's son Robert
sold it in 1765 to Ebenezer Hollick, (fn. 97) a prosperous
miller. (fn. 98) Hollick, who died in 1792, entailed the
estate, which he had enlarged to over 700 a., on his
brother William's son Ebenezer, (fn. 99) who after further
purchases of c. 300 a. owned over half the parish
after inclosure. (fn. 100) He went bankrupt in 1825 (fn. 101) and
died in 1828. His heir was his daughter Ann Blunkett Hollick, who died unmarried in 1864 leaving
her land to her half-sister Caroline's son, Joseph
Hollick Tickell, a lawyer. (fn. 102) Tickell sold almost all
the Whittlesford estate in 1877 to Major Christopher Pemberton, (fn. 103) but retained the lordship of the
manor which he left on his death in 1883 to his son
Joseph Harkness Tickell. (fn. 104) The latter died in 1915
and his son Capt. J. A. Tickell in 1941. Capt.
Tickell's son, J. H. de la T. Tickell, (fn. 105) kept the Tickell
Arms, the principal village inn, in 1973. (fn. 106)
Major Pemberton was dead by 1885. (fn. 107) In 1888
most of his Whittlesford land passed by foreclosure
of a mortgage to W. R. C. Farquhar (d. 1901), and
was sold by Alfred Farquhar in 1909 to G. R. C.
Foster. (fn. 108) When Foster sold the remaining 820 a. in
1919 the estate was broken up: the Cambridgeshire
county council bought c. 440 a., (fn. 109) and H. G. Spicer
c. 90 a., including land called the Lawn and the Park,
which he still owned in 1937. (fn. 110) By 1960 the Lawn
had been acquired by the South Cambridgeshire
R.D.C., which built many council houses there in
the 1960s. (fn. 111)
The medieval manor-house presumably stood
within the rectangular moat which remained, overgrown with trees, in 1972, south-east of the church. (fn. 112)
The house, in decay in 1514, (fn. 113) was repaired or
rebuilt by Robert Tilney (d. 1542). Its windows once
contained glass with the arms of Howard impaling
Tilney. (fn. 114) In the late 18th century it was demolished,
and a new house, called Whittlesford Lodge, was
built, probably c. 1785, by the younger Ebenezer
Hollick (fn. 115) by the south-west side of the moat. It was
of red brick, three bays by five, in the Georgian
style. Irregular rooms at the back, on a different
level, were said to derive from the older house. A
range of stables stood near by. (fn. 116) The Lodge, empty
since 1828, was demolished in 1858. (fn. 117) The Tickells
only occasionally lived in the village, in converted
cottages. (fn. 118)
In 1086 Girard, Count Alan's tenant at Duxford,
held ½ yardland and the soke of another 1¼ yardland
at Whittlesford of the count, and Hardwin de Scalers
had another yardland previously held by a man of
Earl Gurth. (fn. 119) No more is recorded of those properties.
In the early 13th century Barnwell priory owned
120 a. there, held of Whittlesford manor, of which
Prior Lawrence (1213–51) enfeoffed Stephen le
Cheyney for 20s. fee farm. Stephen's son William
divided the land among many under-tenants, who
were holding of Adam le Cheyney in 1279, and from
whom the priory had difficulty in recovering the
service due in 1290. (fn. 120) Another 120 a. had been
granted before 1233 by John le Cheyney, tenant
under the Akenys, for life to Baldwin de Freville, (fn. 121)
who still held that carucate in 1250, when William
le Cheyney claimed to be his lord. (fn. 122) In 1272 William
conveyed 115 a. to Maud Devereux, who in 1276
conveyed a carucate in Whittlesford to Thomas de
Sollers. (fn. 123) In 1278 Thomas and Simon de Sollers
granted it to Adam and Henry of Kirkcudbright, (fn. 124)
who in 1279 held of Simon as tenant of Adam le
Cheyney 122 a. in demesne and c. 105 a. occupied
by free tenants. (fn. 125) The later descent has not been
traced, but the estate may have included the 92 a.,
called a carucate, held in the 15th century by five
generations of the Gedding family. (fn. 126)
In 1279 Ickleton priory owned 34 a. at Whittlesford. (fn. 127) In 1505 Pembroke College, Cambridge,
acquired from the executors of John Ward c. 35 a.
which Ward had acquired or possessed since 1472, (fn. 128)
and in 1547 bought from Robert Lockton c. 55 a.
called Bewlies which Thomas Lockton had acquired
in and after 1448 and which his son and heir Walter
had released to his younger brother Thomas in
1472. (fn. 129) For the combined estate of 90 a. the college
received at inclosure 57 a. It still held 60 a. in 1873. (fn. 130)
Before John Tilney sold the manor he had already
in 1546–7 sold Whittlesford mill and c. 100 a. to
Henry Veysey who in 1557 conveyed the 100 a. to
the brothers Richard and Robert Symons. (fn. 131) Robert
was later said to have acquired half the demesne,
having in or after 1578 bought out John Rogers,
purchaser of another part (fn. 132) and died in 1611 possessed, besides the lease of the impropriate rectory,
of c. 230 a. which passed to his son Robert (fn. 133) (d. 1622).
The younger Robert's son and heir Thomas (fn. 134) occupied that estate c. 1630, (fn. 135) but apparently disposed
of it between 1644 and 1654. (fn. 136)
The impropriate rectory, held by St. Mary's
college, Warwick, (fn. 137) included, besides the great
tithes, c. 31 a. of land. (fn. 138) In 1552 the Crown granted
a lease in reversion from 1563, (fn. 139) which was acquired
by Roger Ascham, Queen Elizabeth's tutor. His wife
Margaret was probably daughter of Thomas Howe,
lessee of half the rectory since 1551, and two of his
sons were born at Whittlesford. Ascham died in
1568. (fn. 140) Margaret, who later married Thomas Rempston, and her sons Giles and Thomas Ascham
received a fresh lease in 1579. (fn. 141) By 1599 Giles and
Thomas had under-let the rectory for 60 years to
Robert Symons (d. 1611). (fn. 142) In 1608 Thomas Ascham
assigned half his interest under a fresh Crown lease,
granted in 1600, to Symons, (fn. 143) on whose behalf the
freehold of the rectory, sold by the Crown in fee
farm, was bought in 1610. (fn. 144) Symons's son Robert
sold all his interest in 1622 to Thomas Ventris, (fn. 145)
who purchased the other half-share of the head-lease
in 1624, so re-uniting the rectory. (fn. 146) The fee-farm
rent, equal to the old reserved rent, was bought
from the Crown by Heneage Finch, earl of Nottingham (d. 1682), to endow an alms-house at Ravenstone (Bucks.), (fn. 147) to which it was still paid in the
19th century. (fn. 148)
Thomas Ventris settled half the rectory on his
daughter Mathew, who in 1630 married Thomas
Dod, to whom Ventris, when he died in 1637, left
the other half, subject to the life-interest of his
second wife Ellen, (fn. 149) whom Dod bought out in
1646. (fn. 150) Before Dod died in 1670 (fn. 151) he had settled the
rectory on his younger son Thomas, who dying
without issue in 1667 left it to his elder brother
Edward (fn. 152) (d. 1678). Edward's son and heir Thomas (fn. 153)
sold the estate in 1707. (fn. 154) By 1711 it had come to
Felix Calvert (fn. 155) (d. 1713), whose heir was his son
Peter (d. 1772). Peter's son Peter Calvert, dean of
Arches, died without issue in 1788, and the estate
was sold (fn. 156) in 1789 to Thomas Thurnall whose
family had leased it since 1723. (fn. 157) At inclosure
Thurnall was allotted 18 a. for glebe and c. 275 a.
for the rectorial tithes, until then received in kind. (fn. 158)
He was succeeded in 1818 by his son Henry John
Thurnall (d. 1866). (fn. 159) The estate was sold in 1872
to Robert Maynard and Allen White, who divided it,
White taking 146 a., sold again in 1885, and Maynard
139 a., (fn. 160) including the old parsonage farm-house,
where the Dods had lived in the 17th century.
It was a three-bay building, brick-fronted to the
high street, timber-framed with three gables behind.
Maynard demolished it in 1872, and built a new
house there, later called Ascham House. (fn. 161) After
Maynard's death in 1883 four of his children sold
his land to the fifth, Albert (d. 1915), whose son
R. J. Maynard sold it in 1920 to the Cambridgeshire
county council. (fn. 162) The council was thereafter the
largest landowner in Whittlesford, owning c. 765 a.
in 1973. (fn. 163)
Economic History.
Almost the whole township, 11¼ hides out of 12, was in 1066 and 1086
included in a single manor. Five hides lay in demesne, and 13 villani and 15 bordars shared the rest.
There were also 5 thralls. The demesne had only
2 plough-teams, and the villani with 9 teams
evidently did most of its ploughing. Whittlesford's
yearly value increased slightly after the Conquest,
from £15 to £16 in 1086. (fn. 164)
By 1279 only just over 2 hides remained in
demesne, the tenants occupying allegedly 91/8 hides,
of which c. 750 a., besides 55 a. of glebe, was held
freely and c. 305 a. in villeinage. The arrangement
of the free holdings was complex, with tenancies and
subtenancies sometimes on two or three levels. Of
the five major tenants immediately under Sir John
de Akeny, Barnwell priory held c. 130 a., mostly
held under it by Adam le Cheyney. Henry Lacy held
c. 70 a., Baldwin de Romilly c. 75 a., and John
Gopil 40 a. Each of those larger holdings, like the
22 or so remaining free holdings, also directly held
of Akeny, were split up into small parcels whose
actual occupiers combined them with holdings of
other fees. The outcome was that, besides 1 large
holding of 122 a., 11 of 20–60 a. amounted to c.
360 a., 10 of 10–15 a. covered 116 a., and 45 of
under 10 a. contained only c. 150 a. between them.
The rents paid, mostly between 1d. and 4d. an acre,
but reaching up to 12d., had evidently been fixed
over a long period. Few freeholders owed boonwork.
The villein tenements were more regularly
arranged. Eight half-yardlanders had 15 a. each,
and 24 other villeins 9 a. each. The former owed
76 works a year, and sent 4 men to 4 harvest-boons,
the latter only 32 works, and 4 harvest-boons with
2 men. Both classes also performed three averages,
and had to mow, carry the hay, reap, and cart
manure. The 9 cottagers were to send 1 man to the
harvest, and help to stack the lord's hay, cover his
house, and make his pond. All the customary
tenants were said then to be the lord's neifs. (fn. 165) By
the late 14th century only one family of bondmen,
subject to such dues as leirwite, remained in the
village, though others paying chevage lived in the
neighbourhood. (fn. 166) The customary land had by 1400
been farmed to its tenants at rents then amounting
to £23 7s. 6d. a year. (fn. 167) Later the standard rate was
1s. an acre. (fn. 168) Entry fines were nominally uncertain, (fn. 169)
but in the 16th century were in practice twice the
yearly rent. (fn. 170) In the 1390s the lord employed
4 carters and ploughmen and a thresher, (fn. 171) and a
shepherd in 1400. Even for the harvest tenantlabour was not called on. In 1400 the lord hired
32 men with 16 carts to clear his crops in one day.
They were paid by the acre besides receiving a substantial harvest supper. That year c. 198 a. of the
demesne had been sown, including some closes near
the manor-house. The crops included c. 100 a. of
dredge and 32 a. of barley, but only c. 20 a. of wheat
and 15 a. of oats. The lord used only part of his
several meadow and pasture, and farmed the herbage
of the rest, also selling 12 ricks of hay. He had in
1400 only 6 sheep but c. 40 pigs. (fn. 172) The demesne,
already once leased c. 1396 to a Cambridge burgess,
was by 1407 at farm to its former bailiff. (fn. 173) It was
usually farmed thereafter. (fn. 174) By 1463 almost 200 a.
of the demesne had been leased to 22 tenants in
parcels of up to 20 a., mostly for 1s. an acre, and two
villagers were jointly farming the remainder. Only
a few orchards and meadows remained in hand. (fn. 175)
Meanwhile the copyholders' properties grew
larger as their numbers fell. Of c. 500 a. held in
copyhold in 1488 one man, a former farmer of the
demesne, occupied c. 80 a. and 7 others with more
than 30 a. each another 250 a. Ten smaller tenants
with 10–20 a. had c. 140 a. In 1514 c. 21 copyholders,
who also possessed several of the 27 free tenements,
occupied 416 a., and most of 183 a. of leased demesne
land. (fn. 176) In 1525 28 men were taxed on land and goods,
and only 21 on wages, but of £140 of movables in
the parish £94 was owned by only 9 men. (fn. 177) Among
the most prosperous families were those of Symons
and Rande. In 1462 five members of the Symons
family together held over 70 a. and leases of c. 50 a.
of demesne. (fn. 178) In 1525 Robert and Richard Symons
together had goods taxed at £36. (fn. 179) That family
later acquired part of the demesne and the lease of
the rectory. (fn. 180) William Rande, lessee of the rectory
in the 1520s when he lost 600 quarters of corn in
a fire in the barn, (fn. 181) left 160 a. of arable at his death
in 1552. (fn. 182) In 1578 there were 48, mostly small, free
tenements, but only 20 copyholders. (fn. 183) At inclosure
c. 200 a. were allotted for copyhold. (fn. 184)
From the 13th century the arable lay in three
main fields, (fn. 185) Bridge field in the south-east, Stonehill field in the south-west, and Holmes field, called
in the 18th century Bar field, (fn. 186) in the north-west.
In the angle between the high street and the Cambridge road was a smaller field called Ryecroft, some
43 a. In 1809 the open fields were said to include
c. 1,500 a. out of 2,470 a. in the parish, (fn. 187) but the
local acre was a three-rood acre. (fn. 188) In the 14th century a triennial rotation was followed. In 1341 it was
alleged that the whole lenten crop had perished, (fn. 189)
and the winter field and the lent field, presumably
including the barley field and pease field, were frequently mentioned in court records from the 14th
to the 16th century. (fn. 190) The predominant crop was
apparently barley rather than wheat. One man in
1631 had 55 a. of barley growing compared with
26 a. of wheat and rye. (fn. 191) Saffron was also grown
from the 16th century to the late 18th. (fn. 192)
The lords of the manor had extensive closes
around the manor-house, used either for arable, as
in 1400 when 32 a. were sown, (fn. 193) or for grass. The
village had much meadow and pasture, amounting
in 1809 to 600 a., by local measure, besides 70 a. of
Lammas meadow. The meadows lay mostly beside
the river, and the largest block of permanent common adjoined the northern border. (fn. 194) Some of the
commons were held in severalty by the lord for part
of the year. (fn. 195) The commons were extensive, and
although in the 15th century the number of beasts
that could be commoned for each tenement was
restricted, (fn. 196) no fresh stints were laid down in the
16th century or later. Inhabitants were forbidden
to set up by-herds of their own, and a common
herdsman was employed. (fn. 197) The lord was to keep a
free bull and boar. (fn. 198) In the 18th century sheep were
not allowed on any common until cattle had had
some days feeding there. (fn. 199)
Of the lord's right to fold 400 sheep, half passed
with the land sold in 1551 to the Symonses, (fn. 200) whose
successors still enjoyed it in 1578, when another fold
for 100 sheep was attached to the former Chesterford chantry lands. The lord's fold took the copyholders' sheep; (fn. 201) those of the freeholders were
folded by turns on the land of the four principal
freeholders, who for that right paid a rent to the lord
and the shepherd's wages. (fn. 202) Of the sheepwalks for
880 sheep 740 belonged c. 1800 to the lord, whose
tenant actually kept in 1802 734 sheep, which yielded
609 lambs. (fn. 203) There were altogether some 840 sheep
c. 1795, (fn. 204) and some 700 Leicester sheep on one of
Hollick's farms in 1808. (fn. 205)
The manor farm, which c. 1550 probably did not
exceed 240 a., (fn. 206) was later enlarged. A holding that
was apparently the demesne included, probably
c. 1670, 300 a. of arable and 60 a. of pasture, forming
a single farm, besides 80 a. let in parcels, and sheepwalk for 400 sheep. (fn. 207) In the late 18th century
Ebenezer Hollick and his nephew and namesake
substantially enlarged the estate, swallowing many
smaller farms and leaving the farmsteads derelict. (fn. 208)
In 1809 the nephew claimed to own 178 a. of closes
and over half the arable, and only c. 15 other landowners were left including Pembroke College and
its lessee William Blow, the last two each having
c. 100 a. The land was not consolidated: a farm of
155 a. lay in 158 places. (fn. 209) The traditional rotation
was still largely followed on the 1,000 a. (by national
measure) of open fields. The 941 a. sown in 1801
(presumably local measure) included 426 a. of
barley, 200 a. of wheat, 122 a. of pease, and 90 a. of
rye, but only 32 a. of turnips and 2 a. of potatoes.
In the 1790s, however, cinquefoil was being sown
on the thinner soil to improve the yield of grass for
mowing. (fn. 210)
An inclosure Act was obtained in 1809, (fn. 211) not
without opposition from the impropriator and Hollick's former tenant Blow, (fn. 212) and the land was probably divided and inclosed the same year. (fn. 213) The
award was executed in 1815. (fn. 214) Of the 1,969 a. of the
parish, the open fields and commons covered
1,617 a. and old closes 302 a. (fn. 215) Over half the land
allotted, c. 885 a., went to Ebenezer Hollick. The
lay rector received c. 300 a., and the vicar 72 a. Pembroke College obtained 57 a. and the chantry estate
c. 45 a. Blow had 69 a., Story Barns 52 a., and two
others 77 a. together. The remaining 20 allottees
had barely 80 a. between them. (fn. 216)
The 19th century saw a considerable concentration of both ownership and occupation. In 1812 out
of 71 persons rated ten, including Hollick and
Thurnall, were farming almost the whole parish.
The smaller farmers usually combined land from
several smaller landowners. (fn. 217) The Hollick estate
was usually divided into two or three large farms.
Thus c. 1850 Stanmoor Hall farm included c. 600 a.,
West or Marking's farm 128 a., and John Rayner's
farm 114 a. (fn. 218) The last two were combined by 1877
to cover c. 220 a. (fn. 219) In 1919 the manorial estate,
c. 515 a., excluding only Rayner's farm, was let to
a single tenant. (fn. 220) Meanwhile Robert Maynard,
besides purchasing half Parsonage farm, (fn. 221) had
bought c. 120 a. of the lesser allotments made in
1815, and William Blow's land and other property
amounting to 104 a. had been acquired by the Cambridge banker Ebenezer Foster (d. 1875). (fn. 222)
Most inhabitants made their living by farming in
the early 19th century. About 1830 there were 110
farm-labourers and 14 farmers, of whom only 2 employed no labour. (fn. 223) In 1851 out of 10 farmers 4 with
a total of c. 350 a. employed 62 men, and the 6 with
c. 325 a. another 21. (fn. 224) Farming was and remains
mainly of a standard mixed arable type. About 1900
Hill farm was described as mainly a sheep farm. (fn. 225)
Numbers of turkeys were also reared for the London
market and driven up before Christmas in flocks
of 800–900. (fn. 226) The village contained usually 6–8 farms
in the late 19th century, (fn. 227) but 10–12 from the 1920s (fn. 228)
after the county council had purchased 815 a. for
letting to smallholders. In 1973 its property was
divided into 10 larger and 3 part-time holdings. (fn. 229)
In 1206 Baldwin de Tony was granted a weekly
market on Tuesdays in his manor at Whittlesford. (fn. 230)
In 1242 his successor Baldwin de Akeny complained
that the bailiffs of Cambridge were taking toll at
Whittlesford Bridge which should rather belong to
him in right of his market. (fn. 231) By a compromise the
lords of Whittlesford later collected the bridge tolls
on Tuesdays, a practice still followed in 1578 and
1770, (fn. 232) long after the market had expired. In 1267
Baldwin de Akeny was granted a market on Mondays and a three-day fair from 23 to 25 August, (fn. 233)
but by 1460 the market, said to be on Tuesday, the
fair, at Trinity, and its pie-powder court were all
yielding nothing, although the bridge tolls produced
12d. a year, (fn. 234) and renders were still due from some
tenements for admission to the market green. (fn. 235) In
1800 the village was still said to have been a markettown. (fn. 236)
Three mills belonged to the manor in 1086, (fn. 237) but
in 1279 there was only one. (fn. 238) Besides the corn-mill,
to which suit from the tenants was still exacted
c. 1420, (fn. 239) a fulling-mill was in use in the 1390s but
not in 1400. (fn. 240) The corn-mill, recorded in 1462, was
in decay in 1514. (fn. 241) John Tilney alienated it to Henry
Veysey in 1546, but in 1553 William Hawtrey
re-united it to the manor, (fn. 242) with which it descended
until c. 1700. (fn. 243) By 1760 Ebenezer Hollick had bought
it from a Mrs. Creek and converted it to produce oil
from linseed, rape, and mustard. Cattle-cake was
made as a by-product. (fn. 244) After the younger Ebenezer
Hollick died in 1828 Charles Thurnall (d. 1889)
carried on the business until the 1880s, employing
20 workmen in 1851. In 1861 the mill was producing
linseed-oil, oil-cake, and artificial manure. (fn. 245) It later
reverted to being a corn-mill, managed from the
1890s by Wisbey & Son, and from 1922 until after
1937 by Fred. Smart & Co. (fn. 246) The mill and millhouse belonged in 1968 to Sir Hamilton Kerr, who
in 1970 gave it to be used after his death by the
Fitzwilliam Museum. (fn. 247) The mill-house was evidently
built by Ebenezer Hollick in 1763. (fn. 248) It has a fivebay front in red brick with segmental headed
windows and prominent voussoirs. The front of the
former oil-mill across the river is disguised with
large ogee-headed windows.
Two large maltings built by Richard Blow in 1773
survived until 1852. (fn. 249) Charles Thurnall kept a
brewery in 1851, (fn. 250) and there were four breweries in
1888. (fn. 251) Among tradesmen out of the ordinary were
a watch-maker from 1858 and a timber-merchant
c. 1900. (fn. 252) The main sources of non-agricultural employment at that period, however, were the Sawston
paper-mill, (fn. 253) where 24 Whittlesford people, mostly
women, worked in 1841 and 91 in 1861, (fn. 254) and the
works established by Robert Maynard in 1834, near
the centre of the high street, to produce agricultural
implements. (fn. 255) In 1861 he employed 30 men. (fn. 256) After
Maynard's death in 1883 the business was carried
on by his son Robert and later his grandson R. J.
Maynard. By 1904 an iron-foundry was attached to
the works. (fn. 257) In the mid 1950s, after R. J. Maynard's
death, the works were closed, and in 1959 the
buildings were sold to Phoenix Tinsel Products Ltd.,
which in 1973 made artificial Christmas trees,
decorative lighting, and display goods there. (fn. 258) St.
George's works, possibly another agricultural tool
factory, was recorded in the 1930s. (fn. 259) From 1929 the
village contained a small artificial fertilizer factory,
owned by Packard & Fison of Ipswich. (fn. 260) By 1970
part of Hill farm was occupied by CIBA Agrochemicals Ltd., and a large building was being
erected in 1972 as the headquarters for their marketing and technical development. (fn. 261) The largest
employer of labour from the parish in the 1960s was
still the Sawston paper-mill. (fn. 262)
Local Government.
Under Edward I the
lord of Whittlesford claimed view of frankpledge,
the assize of bread and of ale, estreats, a pillory,
tumbrel, and gallows, but by what warrant was
unknown. Suit owed from the township to the
county court and sheriff's tourn had been withdrawn
since 1265. (fn. 263) In 1488 ½ a. was held by serving as
hangman. (fn. 264) Court rolls survive, with gaps, for 1391–
1422, 1461–82, 1514–23, and 1553–1618. (fn. 265)
In the late 14th century and the 15th an annual
court leet was held on Trinity Monday, and a separate court baron in the autumn or winter. From the
mid 16th century courts leet and baron combined
were usually held only once a year, sometimes at
longer intervals. (fn. 266) In 1391 it was declared that only
villeins by birth, not customary tenants, owed suit
to the court baron. (fn. 267) The combined court conducted
the usual business of minor jurisdiction, agricultural
regulation, and transfer of copyhold land. Its by-laws
were said to be made with the assent of the whole
vill, or of the lord and all free and customary tenants,
but in practice business was conducted oligarchically. (fn. 268) In 1564 a man was amerced for revealing the
secrets of the chief pledges and homage. (fn. 269) The election of constables, (fn. 270) ale-tasters, (fn. 271) and haywards (fn. 272)
was occasionally recorded. In 1519 the court prohibited dice, cards, and other unlawful games on
weekdays, (fn. 273) and in 1574 forbade householders to
lodge outsiders as inmates. (fn. 274) It was still making
orders about common rights in 1766. (fn. 275)
The churchwardens were occasionally mentioned
from 1479. (fn. 276) By 1578 they were cutting and lopping
willows growing on common land for the benefit of
the whole township. (fn. 277) In the late 17th century the
parish was apparently managed by a small vestry of
five or six, including the churchwardens and constables, who themselves nominated the overseers. (fn. 278)
In the 1720s the parish employed a book-keeper to
record expenditure on its property. (fn. 279) In the early
19th century the parishioners elected both churchwardens. (fn. 280)
A poor-box had been placed in the chancel, as
prescribed by recent legislation, by 1548. (fn. 281) By c. 1600
the former guildhall was being used as a poorhouse
or workhouse, to which a superintendent was appointed in 1635. Its able-bodied inmates were set to
spinning, and wool was also distributed to poor
people to spin into yarn at home. (fn. 282) Putting the poor
to work had ceased by 1652, when the overseers
were distributing cash to several poor people occasionally throughout the year. (fn. 283) At first the town lands
produced enough revenue to support those applying
for relief, and rates were needed only to pay for
apprenticeships, but by 1680 rates were being regularly levied to meet expenditure that rose from
c. £10 a year in the 1660s to c. £40 about 1700, and
occasionally almost to £70. (fn. 284) In 1724 the parish
bought turf in large quantities, presumably as fuel
for the poor. The poor were still sometimes employed
in the 18th century, as in 1764 on moving stones. (fn. 285)
The guildhall was again in use as a workhouse by
1776, when it had 40 inmates (fn. 286) who cost c. £50. By
1784 expenditure on the poor had reached almost
£130. (fn. 287) In 1803 37 people were on permanent
relief: the 19 in the workhouse, then being farmed,
cost £206, and 18 outside, with, presumably,
18 others occasionally relieved, cost £156. Those
outside the workhouse earned c. £5. (fn. 288) The parish
also sold rye to the poor at reduced prices, and augmented wages. (fn. 289) By 1813 only 5 or 6 people were
in the workhouse and 38 on permanent outside
relief, but the cost had risen to £766 because 120
others received occasional support. That number
had been cut to 15 by 1815, but expenditure was
still almost £520. (fn. 290) Of some £350 spent c. 1830
almost half, £172, went to the sick and aged and
widows and children, and c. £60 for occasional
relief, while c. £85 was paid to paupers working for
the parish. (fn. 291) In 1829 12 unemployed men and boys
were doing roadwork. (fn. 292) In 1835 the parish was
merged in the Linton poor-law union, (fn. 293) and in 1934
was transferred with the rest of Linton R.D. to the
South Cambridgeshire R.D., (fn. 294) being included in
South Cambridgeshire in 1974.
Church.
The church at Whittlesford, recorded
by 1217, (fn. 295) had evidently been founded before the
manor was subinfeudated, by one of the main line
of the Tonys, with whose manor of Kirtling the
advowson descended until the late 14th century. (fn. 296)
The church, though a rectory c. 1275, (fn. 297) had previously been sometimes served by vicars, one of
whom left land at Sawston to his son's mother. (fn. 298) By
grant of Thomas, earl of Warwick (d. 1401) in 1385 (fn. 299)
and a papal bull of 1390 the church was appropriated
in 1392–3 to St. Mary's college, Warwick. A vicarage
was ordained, the advowson being assigned to the
college, (fn. 300) which retained it until its dissolution in
1544. (fn. 301) The Crown then exercised the patronage (fn. 302)
until 1558 when at the instance of Bishop Thirlby
the Crown granted the advowson to Jesus College,
Cambridge, (fn. 303) which retained it in 1972. (fn. 304)
The rector had 40 a. of glebe in 1279, (fn. 305) and his
church was valued at 25 to 30 marks in the earlier
13th century (fn. 306) and 40 marks in 1276 and 1291. (fn. 307) In
1393 the vicar had 12 a. of glebe and the small tithes
and offerings, with plough-alms (elemosina sulcorum)
and 'a devotion called certeynes', besides the tithe
of the water-mills. (fn. 308) Later he obtained a pension of
2 marks charged on the rectory, which had also to
pay 26s. 8d. to a deacon (later confused with a dean)
to serve in the church. (fn. 309) The vicar was charged in
1392–3 with repairing the chancel, (fn. 310) but by the 17th
century that burden had been transferred to the
impropriator. (fn. 311)
The vicar received c. 1800 £30 a year for his small
tithes under an ancient modus. (fn. 312) He also had 13s. 4d.
from Whittlesford mill. At inclosure he was allotted
65 a. for tithes and 7 a. for glebe. (fn. 313) The vicarage had
76½ a. in 1887, (fn. 314) and still retained 78½ a. in 1972. (fn. 315)
In 1393 the vicar was assigned a hall and chamber
in the rectory house, apparently near the church,
and a grange and dovecot nearby. (fn. 316) The vicarage
house was said in 1728 to be very small and indifferent, (fn. 317) and vicars did not usually live there in the
later 18th century. (fn. 318) In 1836 it was called a mere
cottage. (fn. 319) By 1851 it had been sold and by 1894
demolished. A new house in North Street (fn. 320) was built
in the 1870s. (fn. 321)
The vicarage was worth £10 in 1535, (fn. 322) £23 in
1650, (fn. 323) and c. £27 in 1728. (fn. 324) From 1813 Jesus College substantially increased the income by paying
rent for land at Willingham, whose proceeds went
to the vicar, (fn. 325) so that he received £170 a year c.
1830. (fn. 326) Further contributions by the college of £200
a year, granted in 1867 and 1872, (fn. 327) raised his income
to c. £350 by 1877, (fn. 328) but the glebe brought in only
£82 in 1887 and 1897. (fn. 329) When the college's support
ceased soon after 1900, the income fell to c. £207. (fn. 330)
In 1351 Henry Cyprian granted land worth
5 marks a year for a chaplain to sing mass at the Virgin Mary's altar in Whittlesford church. Three successive chaplains held that chantry until 1393, when,
because no licence in mortmain had been obtained,
it was supposedly forfeited to the Crown. (fn. 331) The
township apparently recovered the land, which was
held in 1432 by feoffees and, having been converted
to other purposes, escaped confiscation at the Reformation. (fn. 332) Some 110 a. in Whittlesford called chantry
land c. 1540 belonged not to Cyprians but to a chantry
at Great Chesterford (Essex), suppressed by 1549. (fn. 333)
In 1279 3½ a. were held of the church by providing
bread and wine for the Easter Sunday mass. (fn. 334) In
1520 assized rents of c. 5s. were due from of old for
the sepulchre light. (fn. 335) In 1500 John Newton left
12 a. to the church for an obit. (fn. 336)
A guild in honour of St. John the Baptist was
founded shortly before 1389, when it raised 50s.
to repair the church. (fn. 337) The south chapel was called
St. John the Baptist's c. 1500. (fn. 338) In 1525 the village
guild had a stock of £3. (fn. 339) After the Reformation the
parish retained possession of its guildhall, using it
as a workhouse, poorhouse, or schoolroom. The
building, standing north-east of the cross-roads, is
a timber-framed early-16th-century building, having
a jettied upper storey with brackets and a carved
bressumer and one medieval doorway. In 1966 the
parish council sold the building, (fn. 340) which was being
renovated in 1972.
Rectors were occasionally recorded from the mid
13th century. Edmund of London, rector 1296–1316
or later, was a pluralist and in the king's service. (fn. 341)
Thomas Machye, vicar 1496–1508, had been a fellow
of King's and headmaster of Eton, and his successor
had a degree in civil law: (fn. 342) in the early 16th century
the church was probably served by the curates who
witnessed parishioners' wills. (fn. 343) Although Jesus
College became patron in 1558, it did not begin to
appoint ex-fellows as vicars regularly until 1597. (fn. 344)
Between 1600 and 1640 the vicars usually served
through curates, one of whom remained in office for
over 10 years after being charged with fathering an
illegitimate child. (fn. 345) Robert Symons (d. 1622) left
a rent-charge of £10 a year from Borough mill,
Sawston, for a sermon at Whittlesford every other
Sunday. (fn. 346) By the 18th century the vicar had appropriated the money as part of his stipend. (fn. 347)
Robert Clarkson, vicar from 1638 and a fellow of
Jesus, was ejected in 1644. (fn. 348) His successor John
Swan, not a Jesus man, said to be a good preacher in
1650, (fn. 349) retained the living, in plurality with Sawston,
until his death in 1671. (fn. 350) Thereafter until 1807 only
two vicars were instituted, (fn. 351) and the living was
usually held by sequestration, (fn. 352) perhaps on account
of its poverty. In 1792 the incumbent was reckoned
as one of the diocese's ten poorest vicars. (fn. 353) In the
late 17th century and again from c. 1780 to 1806 the
ministers were frequently styled curates. Except
from 1771 to 1807 they were usually Jesus men, and
frequently fellows. (fn. 354) When one fellow was legally
prevented c. 1728 from holding the living, a nominal
vicar was instituted, under whom he served the
cure. (fn. 355) The sequestrators often did the duty by
deputy. Over 20 clergymen signed the register as
curates between 1725 and 1747. (fn. 356) Later the ministers usually lived in college, and went out on Sundays to read the service. In 1728 there were two
Sunday services, and c. 35 attended the three communion services. In 1775 and 1807 the minister performed only one service, alternately morning and
evening, and only c. 20 came to communion in
1807. (fn. 357)
Fellows of Jesus continued to hold the vicarage
until 1844, and were still non-resident, occasionally
employing curates and not holding more than one
service a week until after 1840. In 1825 a congregation of ten at communion was thought unusually
large, and some parishioners refused to pay church
rates. The prevalence of dissent meant that many
did not go to church. In 1836 the congregation seldom exceeded 200; (fn. 358) on Census Sunday 1851, when
there were again two services, the afternoon service
was attended by 142, besides 78 school children. (fn. 359)
The vicars went on living at Cambridge until the
1870s. In 1873 245 people were said to go to church,
and the monthly communions had up to 22. (fn. 360) A. C.
Jennings, vicar 1877–86, quarrelled sharply with
his most prominent parishioners, especially the
Maynards, and would not act with them on parish
matters. He also alienated Edward Towgood, owner
of Sawston paper-mill, who had previously brought
his workmen to Whittlesford, but thereupon led
them back to Sawston church. (fn. 361) In 1897, although
there were c. 60 communicants, only a third of the
inhabitants were considered steady church people. (fn. 362)
In 1937 it was said that fewer than 250 inhabitants
attended church. (fn. 363) E. C. Sherwood, vicar 1933–45,
who had served 27 years as a headmaster, turned the
large Victorian vicarage house into a training house
for ordinands styled St. Andrew's Theological College. Some of its students helped as curates. Sherwood moved the college briefly to Pampisford c.
1946. (fn. 364)
The church of ST. ANDREW, so called in the
later Middle Ages, (fn. 365) received the additional name of
ST. MARY, patron of the chantry, after the 16th
century. (fn. 366) In the late 19th century it was thought to
bear the name of St. Barnabas, on whose day the
village feast was held. (fn. 367) The church consists of a
chancel with south chapel, central tower, and nave
with south aisle and porch, and is built of field
stones with ashlar dressings. Until stripped c. 1910
the walls were plastered externally. (fn. 368) The Norman
church comprised only a nave, central tower, and
chancel. The thick north wall of the nave survives,
with one round-headed window, and the lower stage
of the tower, with four such windows. The south
window is surrounded by linear carvings of grotesque
creatures. In the 13th century the chancel was
rebuilt, with a row of lancets, mostly later blocked,
in its north wall; a south aisle, divided from the
nave by a three-bay arcade, was added alongside the
nave and tower. The nave walls were heightened,
and its roof raised, bringing a tower window inside
the church. Square openings over the nave arcade
may represent clerestory windows of that period. In
1352 the high altar was reconsecrated, (fn. 369) probably
after further remodelling, in which two Decorated
windows were inserted in the north wall of the nave.
The west window, of the same period, formerly contained the arms of Wateville. (fn. 370) The porch was built
by Henry Cyprian (fl. 1350). (fn. 371) About 1390 the
church, especially its roof, was said to be ruinous. (fn. 372)
In the early 15th century new windows were inserted
in the south aisle, and the tower was given new arches
to the nave and chancel and a taller belfry stage. The
tower bore the arms of Scales and, allegedly, Beauchamp. (fn. 373) Its new belfry windows cut off the tops
of earlier ones. It is surmounted by a short leaded
spire, which was missing in the early 19th century. (fn. 374)
By 1500 a two-bay chapel had been built south of
the chancel; (fn. 375) the original screens between chancel
and chapel survive. (fn. 376) The east windows are probably early-16th-century, that of the chancel once
containing the arms of Tilney impaling Playters. (fn. 377)
Bequests for glazing the church were made in 1521. (fn. 378)
The plain square font is 13th-century. There are
remains of medieval decorative painting in the
blocked lancets in the chancel. Fifteenth-century
seating, with carved fronts and bench-ends, remains
in the nave, and a contemporary desk with poppyheads in the chancel. Fragments of one or more
alabaster retables were found in 1876, walled up
in the south chapel. (fn. 379) Insets in the nave formerly
contained brasses to John Newton (d. 1500) and his
two wives. (fn. 380) There are wall-tablets to Mary (d. 1690),
wife of Thomas Dod, and William Westley (d. 1723)
who endowed the village school.
After the Reformation the south chapel, called
c. 1665 the lord's chapel, fell into disrepair. In 1638
the church was overcrowded with prominent
parishioners' pews. (fn. 381) In 1783 many windows were
decaying and blocked with plaster, their mullions
gone. (fn. 382) In 1873 the church contained reserved pews
for 87, benches for 117, and a large pew for 90 children at the west end. (fn. 383) The high pews, except for the
manorial pew under the tower which survived until
1913, were swept away when the interior was cleaned
and restored between 1875 and 1882. (fn. 384) The roofs
and external fabric were thoroughly restored between
1905 and 1922. (fn. 385)
The church was well equipped with vessels and
vestments in the early 14th century. One vestment
had been given by the countess of Warwick, the
patron's wife. (fn. 386) In 1552 both chalices and patens
were silver gilt. (fn. 387) The plate is of the 19th and 20th
centuries. (fn. 388) There were four bells and a sanctus bell
in 1552. (fn. 389) There were five bells in 1742 and in the
19th century, (fn. 390) cast in 1631 (by Miles Gray), 1672,
1708, 1730, and 1793. (fn. 391) They were rehung in 1905,
and after 1922 there were said to be six. (fn. 392) The registers begin in 1559 and are virtually complete. (fn. 393)
Nonconformity.
In 1728 there were 5 dissenting families (fn. 394) in Whittlesford, and in 1783 2 or
3 dissenters who worshipped at Fowlmere. (fn. 395) Dissent
increased after Ebenezer Hollick (d. 1792) bought
the manor. He was a trustee of a Baptist chapel in
Cambridge, and allowed the Baptist congregations
of Cambridge and Saffron Walden to use the river
at Whittlesford for adult baptism. In 1767 c. 40
people, in the white gowns that Hollick kept for the
purpose, were dipped near the mill by Andrew
Gifford. (fn. 396) The Hollicks remained Baptists and declined to be buried in the churchyard, building
a family monument just outside it. (fn. 397) They probably
worshipped at Cambridge, (fn. 398) but their principal
tenant, William Blow, had his house licensed for
dissenting worship in 1800, and in 1809 a building
owned by Ebenezer Hollick was similarly licensed. (fn. 399)
In 1825 over half the population were Baptists, most
of them born and bred in that sect. (fn. 400)
They had then no regular teacher, (fn. 401) and after
Hollick died in 1828 they came under the influence
of the Duxford Independent church. In 1851 its
minister was serving a chapel at Whittlesford, where
he reported a congregation of 250 at his evening
services. (fn. 402) Whittlesford was a preaching station of
Duxford in 1860, when an Independent chapel was
registered at Whittlesford. (fn. 403) By 1872 (fn. 404) the Duxford
minister was holding monthly communion services
in a barn. About 112 people probably attended in
1873, and 250 were chapel-goers in 1877. (fn. 405) About
1875 a congregation, with its own lay pastor, independent of that at Duxford, was established, and a new
chapel had been built by 1878. (fn. 406)
Religious dissent was encouraged by the Maynards, (fn. 407) the principal employers in the parish, and
in 1897 two-thirds of the inhabitants were dissenters. (fn. 408) In 1903 the congregation had a new red-brick
chapel with 325 sittings built by the Duxford road.
The old one was used as a Sunday school until it
was burnt down in 1918. (fn. 409) The chapel had 80 members and 115 children in its Sunday school in 1905. (fn. 410)
Its membership later declined from 96 in 1916 to
41 in 1955, but recovered, as population grew, to
58 in 1968. (fn. 411) By 1970 it was sharing a minister with
Sawston and Little Shelford. (fn. 412)
There were a few Methodists in the parish in
1807. (fn. 413) George Barker, who bought the old vicarage,
built on the site a Primitive Methodist chapel, which
still existed in 1873 (fn. 414) and may have been used by the
Independent congregation in the 1870s. (fn. 415)
Education.
About 1601 the curate was acting
as schoolmaster. (fn. 416) A schoolmaster recorded in 1605
was called a card-player and a fencer, who would not
go to church. (fn. 417) The parish had no established school
until the 18th century, when William Westley, a
Cambridge butcher born at Whittlesford, left by
will proved 1723 c. 66 a. at Hempstead (Essex) in
reversion to endow a C. of E. school at Whittlesford
for 30 boys and 15 girls from poor families, from
Duxford and Sawston if there were too few in
Whittlesford. (fn. 418) A master was to teach the boys reading, writing, and accounting, and a mistress to teach
the girls reading, sewing, and knitting. The surplus
income was for apprenticing, books, and clothing
the children.
After Westley's widow died in 1737 the land was
conveyed in 1741 to trustees, who hired the guildhall
as a schoolroom; no Scheme was approved until the
1760s, when the last surviving trustee's heirs tried
to appropriate the income. Ebenezer Hollick (d.
1792) had recovered the estate in Chancery by 1768,
and in 1771 a Scheme in accordance with Westley's
will was made. The endowment produced c. £45
a year in 1771, and £70 in 1825, (fn. 419) including the hire
of a schoolroom, the guildhall having been converted
by 1770 into a poorhouse. In the early 19th century
the boys' and girls' schools were usually held in
separate cottages. (fn. 420) In 1854 the boys' schoolroom
was in a ruinous shed, once a blacksmith's shop. (fn. 421)
About 1810 the master was a bad-tempered onearmed ex-marine, (fn. 422) and the veteran in office in 1854
was thought unlikely to merit a certificate. (fn. 423) In 1825
the boys were taught reading, writing, and arithmetic, the girls sewing and knitting. (fn. 424) Numbers rose
from 30 boys and 30 girls in 1818 (fn. 425) to 40 and 42 in
1846. (fn. 426) In 1833 the parish contained two other
schools, with 24 pupils paid for by their parents,
and one evening school with 10 pupils. (fn. 427)
P. C. M. Haskin, vicar from 1844, wished to
reform the charity school, but was long frustrated
by the aged trustee, Ebenezer Hollick, 'an old infidel
chartist'. About 1854 Haskin sought a Scheme by
which the management of the school, freed from the
detailed prescriptions in Westley's will, was transferred to the churchwardens, and subscribers. Under
the Scheme funds from Westley's endowment, later
supplemented by a parliamentary grant, were used
to buy a site and build a school-house, completed in
1859, in which a National school, including an
infants' department, was then opened. (fn. 428) In 1860 its
staff of four included one certificated teacher. (fn. 429) In
1873 there were c. 90 boys and girls, besides 47 infants. The endowment probably yielded £50 of the
cost, the remainder being raised from subscriptions
and school-pence. (fn. 430) Financial difficulties c. 1888
were met by a voluntary rate, (fn. 431) but that resource
had failed by 1897, when the endowment produced
only £15 and subscriptions £56. (fn. 432) Attendance at the
school, including the infants, declined steadily from
a peak of 174 in 1884 to 105 c. 1904, and 75 c. 1927. (fn. 433)
The school estate was sold in 1922 for £875, the
interest being usually spent thereafter on building
repairs. (fn. 434) The school was re-organized in 1930 into
junior mixed and infants' departments, the older
children being sent to Sawston village college. (fn. 435)
Whittlesford school, still C. of E., was moved in
1972 from its old site on the high street to new
buildings off Mill Lane, accommodating 300. (fn. 436)
In 1873 an adult evening class was attended by
c. 20 pupils. (fn. 437) A girls' boarding school was set up
c. 1808, and one was kept between c. 1892 and 1904
at the Grove. (fn. 438)
Charities for the Poor.
Whittlesford's
principal charity (fn. 439) was formed by combining
Cyprian's lands and Swallow's charity. Cyprian's
lands, formerly the endowment of a chantry,
amounted in 1517 to c. 70 a. (fn. 440) It is not known how
the endowment escaped confiscation or was used
before 1625, when it was agreed that the money
should no longer be used to pay taxes or the king's
carriage, but should meet the common charges of
the inhabitants. (fn. 441)
Nicholas Swallow, by will proved 1557, left his
house and croft, after his widow's death, for the
common charges of the town and 20 a. for a dole to
the poor at Christmas and Easter. (fn. 442) The trustees
entered on 22 a. in 1558. From 1591 to c. 1608, by
agreement, they received only a £2 rent-charge for
the land, but vindicated their proper title in 1624.
In 1649 Cyprian's and Swallow's lands were
settled on the same trustees. In the late 17th century
they yielded together c. £6 a year, usually distributed
by the overseers. (fn. 443) The combined lands, called the
town or poor land, amounted to 94 a. in 1767 and
were let for c. £35, (fn. 444) of which £7 was in the 1780s
given in cash to the poor at Christmas and Easter,
and the remainder used for poor-relief. (fn. 445) In 1815
35 a. were allotted to the charity for general purposes, and 10 a. for the poor's distribution. (fn. 446)
In 1837, when the income was no longer used to
relieve the poor-rates, £16 was indiscriminately distributed in cash doles, 2 guineas subscribed to
Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, and the rest
mainly used for selling coal at reduced prices. In the
1850s up to £20 a year was given in cash among
c. 140 families (fn. 447) in proportion to the number of their
children. In 1880 122 families, about two-thirds
of the population, each received 1¼ cwt. of cheap
coal and up to 3s. in money. The charity farm was
let from 1789 until c. 1892 to members of the Maynard family, (fn. 448) to which several trustees belonged.
In 1880 the vicar complained of favouritism and
nepotism, and a Scheme imposed in 1881 made
tenants and suppliers ineligible as trustees. In 1900
£9 out of £100 income was spent in doles and £50–
60 in selling coal at half-price to c. 100 people.
A Scheme of 1911 combined the other parish
charities with the town lands charity, the income to
be spent partly on such public purposes as building
cottages and lighting roads, partly in subscriptions
to hospitals and provident societies and on apprenticeships, limiting the amount to be spent on doles
to the aged poor to £30 a year. In 1925 two cottages
were built on the Charity land, and over £40 a year
was subscribed to the local coal club. In 1960 the
yearly income was c. £180, of which £73 was spent
on charitable purposes. After 1968 the old charity
farm-house and other cottages were sold, and the
proceeds went towards building 15 houses, mostly
bungalows, completed in 1971, in Swallow's Close,
to be let to young married couples and pensioners.
Of £240 yielded by the land in 1970 c. £75 was used
for charity, the balance paying mortgages on the new
houses.
John Tharbye, by will proved 1617, left a rentcharge of £2 a year for the poor. The charity was
known as Scutches after the property charged. (fn. 449) In
1783 it was distributed at Christmas and Easter, (fn. 450)
and in 1837 with Swallow's money. Whittlesford
also benefited from Lettice Martin's dole, (fn. 451) receiving
in 1786 13s. 4d. (fn. 452) and in 1837 £1 6s., distributed to
poor widows, and holding £52 17s. worth of stock
in 1911, when Scutches and Martin's charities were
merged with the town land charity. Scutches rentcharge was redeemed for £30 in 1970.
Land allotted for common rights attached to the
guildhall, called the town house in 1837 when it was
considered to be a charity, was then let by the parish
officers who applied the rent in relief of the rates.
Land called Askams, owned by the Huddlestons,
then rendered to the township 1 qr. of malt in place
of its aftermath. The beer made from the malt was
drunk by those beating the bounds of the parish on
Ganging Monday. Payment ceased c. 1850. (fn. 453)